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Sunday, September 18, 2011

"Looking Back on the last 37 years ..." 'Judith Whitehead' (Inspirational Monday)

Judith Whitehead  from Amherst N.Y  is back guest blogging about  the many  changes in the last 37 years... Judith has worked as a health-care  professional for over 25 years.

Judy Whitehead with her husband  Steve, along with my sister Linda and brother in-law Marvin Gross share in the joys of many years of happy Marriage...Steve and Marvin are often confused for Richard Dreyfus the actor...

As I approach my 37Th wedding anniversary, I am starting to reflect on how things have changed over the last several years; they are not necessarily all changes for the better. When my husband and I married in the 1970’s life was so much simpler. Our country was not at an almost 10% rate of unemployment and jobs were much easier to find in every field. Rent for our apartment was $175.00 and it included the heat.
 Now that same apartment is several hundred dollars a month.

Having no cell phones, no cable TV, sharing one car and using cash for purchases since there were no ATM machines, life was easy and simple. Our biggest weekly expense was groceries, and for $20.00 we could buy enough food to last the week. A car payment for a loan was $40.00 a month and gas was about 50 cents a gallon. In a driving trip across the country in the 1970’s we needed to stop for gasoline and protested the price of 75 cents a gallon and decided to drive to the next station.I do have to admit, through the years I have enjoyed the advances in technology greatly.

There have been great strides in medicine and treatment for diseases; cell phones have simplified life in some ways but have caused more stress in other ways. Home computers have opened up a world of knowledge for everyone. What was the price of a simple calculator back in the 70’s is now the price of a basic computer today. It is an amazing time to be alive.

We have come full circle in the year 2011; we have walked our “must have” list up quit a bit. The first thing I do in the morning is check my computer, talk to friends on facebook and check my cell phone for messages. I text to my friends if I am in a hurry, and pass through Tim Horton’s doughnut & coffee drive through using my speed pass to save time paying. Our lives have become full of conveniences, some maybe not for the better. We are all in such a hurry today that our lives are passing us by.

Maybe my dad has had the right idea all along. He never used a calculator, and always added columns of numbers in his head for work. That has probably kept his mind sharp all these years. No answering machine for him; if he missed a call…oh well, “they will call back”. Cell phones are out of the question and forget about a computer. Cable TV is unnecessary, and since he never watched much TV anyway during his younger years, all the repeats are new to him now. He’s managed to make it to 92 years old without these “necessities”.

I have come to the conclusion after reaching the 37 year mark of marriage, that maybe “less is more” that has become my new mantra. I think it is time to regroup and try and get back to the basics. I am going to try and watch less TV and use my time to be more creative. It’s time to retool on how to relax and enjoy the beauty around us. I am going to try and slow down my “fast forward” speed and enjoy life more. Being married to the same person for 37 years has made for a fulfilling and eventful life. Having someone to share life’s curve balls and joys with, bring no regrets.

When reflecting on the past many years I can think of some things I would have done differently but here we are, a statistic now a days. There aren't so many people that can say they are still married from my generation. I run into people all the time that surprise me with their separation/divorce news after being married for over 30 years. Things don’t always go as planned in life but having someone to share those experiences with brings comfort and satisfaction to ones life. Marriage is no easy task; it’s definitely a compromise.

Couples of today give up easily if their road becomes rocky; true, not every marriage was meant to be, but don’t bail too quickly before you determine if there is anything to salvage. Many times there are rewards to reap.
The opinions, beliefs and viewpoints expressed by the various authors and forum participants on this blog site do not necessarily reflect the opinions, beliefs and viewpoints of the Publisher of Dakinetalk the blog, but they could? ;D)

If you would like to express yourself about any subject you feel passionate about, please  feel free to submit a guest blog to dakinetalk. Please limit guest blogs between 200-500 words, along with a short bio and photo of yourself. Send all blog submissions to; jrsensei@hotmail.com  who knows your blog could go viral!

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

via facebook;"You, Cheryl Eayrs Olstad, Debbie Eayrs and Douglas Dunn like this..."

Douglas Dunn said...

via facebook;"Excellent, insightful, thought-provoking observations!

Certainly we have all seen huge changes in the last 37 years.

37 years ago, my daughter was a newborn, I was a struggling single father left alone with an infant, and every day was a struggle. Rent was cheap in dollars, but who had dollars?

Today, with a second marriage approaching 25 years (after raising my daughter alone up to her teenage years), with my daughter grown and married and blessing me with granddaughters ranging in age from 1 to 16 years, I no longer struggle financially, and can be there to support others who do.

Health care? Wow! What a career to witness changes -- the good, the bad and the ugly.
Technological advances no would could have dreamed of in 1974, but undermined by corporate death panels at insurance companies (known as “underwriting” when coverage is refused in advance, and “recission” when denied retroactively, after the fact) limiting access to whatever extent we let them.

We protested the price of 75¢ gas in the 1970’s, shrieked when it went to $4.00 in the 2010’s, and now (having upgraded the gas guzzling Prius for a 100% electric Leaf), haven’t paid for gas in weeks and don’t care what the price goes to!

Sure, our luxuries are not “necessary.”
Those in the era of the cave men, the Stone Age and the Dark Ages survived without them.

I for one am grateful for the improvements, but mourn the loss of what we have given up to obtain them.
For every benefit there is a cost.
We each decide where our priorities lie."

Debbie Eayrs said...

ia Facebook;"Jim... I just noticed I can't write on your wall!"

Douglas Dunn said...

via facebook;"Me neither, Debbie.
I can add comments to posts, but can't write on Kimo's wall.
Looks to me like Kimo set the privacy preferences one notch too high, unless he just doesn't like us...."

James "Kimo" Rosen said...

Doug and Debbie, I have it set up that way, many of my 900 plus friends that I don't know were posting on my wall... I also use facebook primarily for my blog and letters to the editor, I no longer make personal posts, like going to the grocery store etc... so either respond to a post or send me a personal FB message on the upper right side...